Eagles Jeremy S, Carlsen Anthony N, MacKinnon Colum D
Department of Physical Therapy and Human Movement Sciences, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, USA.
Exp Brain Res. 2015 May;233(5):1625-37. doi: 10.1007/s00221-015-4237-5. Epub 2015 Mar 6.
Movements that are executed or imagined activate a similar subset of cortical regions, but the extent to which this activity represents functionally equivalent neural processes is unclear. During preparation for an executed movement, presentation of a startling acoustic stimulus (SAS) evokes a premature release of the planned movement with the spatial and temporal features of the tasks essentially intact. If imagined movement incorporates the same preparatory processes as executed movement, then a SAS should release the planned movement during preparation. This hypothesis was tested using an instructed-delay cueing paradigm during which subjects were required to rapidly release a handheld weight while maintaining the posture of the arm or to perform first-person imagery of the same task while holding the weight. In a subset of trials, a SAS was presented at 1500, 500, or 200 ms prior to the release cue. Task-appropriate preparation during executed and imagined movements was confirmed by electroencephalographic recording of a contingent negative variation waveform. During preparation for executed movement, a SAS often resulted in premature release of the weight with the probability of release progressively increasing from 24 % at -1500 ms to 80 % at -200 ms. In contrast, the SAS rarely (<2 % of trials) triggered a release of the weight during imagined movement. However, the SAS frequently evoked the planned postural response (suppression of bicep brachii muscle activity) irrespective of the task or timing of stimulation (even during periods of postural hold without preparation). These findings provide evidence that neural processes mediating the preparation and release of the focal motor task (release of the weight) are markedly attenuated or absent during imagined movement and that postural and focal components of the task are prepared independently.
实际执行或想象的动作会激活类似的皮质区域子集,但这种活动在多大程度上代表功能等效的神经过程尚不清楚。在准备执行一个动作时,呈现一个惊人的听觉刺激(SAS)会引发计划动作的过早释放,而任务的空间和时间特征基本保持不变。如果想象动作包含与实际执行动作相同的准备过程,那么SAS应该在准备过程中释放计划动作。本研究采用指令延迟提示范式对这一假设进行了测试,在此范式中,受试者被要求在保持手臂姿势的同时快速释放手持重物,或者在手持重物时对同一任务进行第一人称想象。在一部分试验中,在释放提示前1500、500或200毫秒呈现SAS。通过对伴随负变化波形的脑电图记录,证实了实际执行和想象动作期间的任务适当准备。在准备实际执行动作时,SAS常常导致重物过早释放,释放概率从-1500毫秒时的24%逐渐增加到-200毫秒时的80%。相比之下,SAS在想象动作期间很少(<2%的试验)触发重物释放。然而,无论任务或刺激时间如何(即使在没有准备的姿势保持期间),SAS经常会引发计划的姿势反应(肱二头肌肌肉活动的抑制)。这些发现提供了证据,表明在想象动作期间,介导局部运动任务(重物释放)准备和释放的神经过程明显减弱或不存在,并且任务的姿势和局部成分是独立准备的。